Derived from Turkmen anna "Friday" and gül "flower, rose".
Turkish variant and Turkmen form of Aslan.
Means "ancestor" in Turkish and Turkmen.
From Turkmen ata meaning "father, ancestor" combined with the suffix jan meaning "dear, darling" (of Persian origin).
Means "mirror" in Turkmen, ultimately from Persian آینه (āyneh).
Derived from Turkmen aý "moon" and nabat, a type of crystallized sugar candy.
Form of Azad in several languages.
Derived from Turkmen bahar meaning "spring" and gül meaning "flower, rose" (both roots ultimately of Persian origin).
Turkmen form of the Turkic word bagatur meaning "hero, warrior".
Means "festival, holiday" in Turkmen.
Means "happiness" in Turkmen.
Means "given" in Turkmen, from the past tense of bermek.
Means "king, tsar" in Turkmen.
From Turkmen durmak meaning "stop, stand".
Tajik and Turkmen form of Jamila.
Means "beautiful" in Turkmen.
From Persian گل (gol) meaning "flower, rose" and شاد (shād) meaning "happy".
Kyrgyz and Turkmen form of Qadir.
Turkish, Turkmen and Bosnian form of Karim.
Variant of Leila, and the usual Turkish, Azerbaijani and Kurdish form.
Azerbaijani, Turkmen and Armenian variant of Leyla. Leyli and Majnun is a 16th-century Azerbaijani poem by Fuzuli based on the Arab tale of Layla and...
Possibly derived from Persian مه (mah) meaning "moon" or مهر (mehr) meaning "friendship, love, kindness".
Means "goal, purpose, intention" in Turkmen and Kyrgyz, both derived from Arabic مقْصد (maqṣid).
Means "deer" in Mongolian, Azerbaijani, Armenian and Turkmen, referring to the Caspian Red Deer.
Means "place, town, edge" in Turkmen, ultimately from Arabic مكان (makān) meaning "place, position" [1].
From Persian مردانه (mardāneh) meaning "manly, masculine".
Means "sharp-eyed" in Turkmen.
Means "feast, gathering" in Turkmen.
Russian, Ukrainian, Turkmen and Armenian form of Nazarius.
Means "gentle, tender, delicate" in Turkmen, ultimately from Persian نازک (nāzok).
Means "fasting, Ramadan" in Turkmen and Kazakh (of Persian origin).
Means "compensation" in Turkmen (of Arabic origin).
Ruslan
m
Azerbaijani, Indonesian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Malay, Turkmen, Uzbek, Avar, Belarusian, Chechen, Ossetian, Russian, Tatar, Ukrainian
Form of Yeruslan used by Aleksandr Pushkin in his poem Ruslan and Ludmila (1820), which was loosely based on Russian and Tatar folktales of Yeruslan...
Means "cypress" in Turkmen (derived from Persian, ultimately from Sumerian).
Means "boxwood tree" in Turkmen (of Persian origin).
Turkish and Turkmen form of Sardar.